海角社区

By Kim Lamb Gregory

海角社区CI's Environmental Science & Resource Management (ESRM) research teams and alumni help tackle some of California鈥檚 most perilous environmental problems鈥攍ike wildfires.

Lisa Cox, 鈥10 B.S. ESRM has been a voice of fire information for the media during the Woolsey Fire and Thomas fires, among others, and is now a Public Affairs Specialist for the US Forest Service in San Bernardino.

鈥淥nce I had about 15 media interviews in a day for three days straight,鈥 Cox said of the Apple fire in Riverside/San Bernardino counties. 鈥淭he media were texting, calling, emailing. I loved it 鈥 it was exhilarating.鈥

On another front, Assistant Professor of ESRM Emily Fairfax, Ph.D., gained national attention for her research into beaver dams and how they can create fire resistant green oases that can serve as a refuge for wildlife and stop fires from advancing.聽

Lisa Cox鈥淢y research was the first to show that if you have beaver damming in a creek, the area around the beaver dam is going to stay pretty green and not burn,鈥 Fairfax said. 鈥淭hey are creating fire-resistant patches in the landscape.鈥澛

Fairfax鈥檚 research also appeared in several international publications and podcasts, including Science News Magazine, National Geographic, BBC Wildlife, the National Wildlife Federation鈥檚 Artemis, and a highly-ranked ecology journal called Ecological Applications.聽

ESRM student Brandon Osorio was among the student researchers who joined Fairfax鈥檚 research team by mapping beaver dams to see how they fared during the 2020 fire season in the Southwest.

鈥淲e鈥檙e expanding our research to look into what are known as megafires,鈥 Fairfax explained, referring to fires that burn more than 100,000 acres. 鈥淲e are looking at how ecosystems fared during the aftermath of fires in Colorado, Northern California and Oregon.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 really cool looking at beavers and finding out how they support plant life and organisms around them,鈥 Osorio said. 鈥淏eaver dams help prevent droughts and flooding by slowing the water down and spreading it out.鈥

Because of the pandemic, most of the research was conducted virtually by mapping fire regions and beaver dams before and after a wildfire. But student researchers looking into other environmental advantages of beaver-damming鈥攕uch as Ramie Klocko鈥攄id get a chance to actually wade through rivers looking at beaver dams near Atascadero along with Fairfax.

鈥淏eavers are listed as pests, so they have kind of a bad rap, but what a lot of people don鈥檛 know is they鈥檙e native to the area and they can do some great things for us if we let them,鈥 Klocko said.聽

Cox said her career evolution into her perfect job began with her ESRM degree and a desire to connect people with nature. Cox then volunteered with California State Parks in Malibu and then worked as an intern with the California Condor Recovery Program. After graduating from 海角社区CI, she joined the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service in San Diego as a park ranger, but when Cox was assigned to work as public information officer for the Gap Fire in 2018, she felt she had found where she belonged.

鈥淚 just kept racking up assignments and falling harder and harder in love,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 love the speed of it, how fast-paced it is, the teamwork. Every single person is important and essential.鈥

In April of 2020, Cox accepted her dream job with the San Bernardino National Forest.

鈥淲hen I got the offer, I just started crying and I was like 鈥榦h my gawd, yes!鈥欌 Cox said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I鈥檝e ever been this happy to accept a job.鈥

A beaver dam

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漏 Spring 2021 / Volume 26 / Number 1 / Biannual

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